Receive the latest local updates in your inbox. The pilot who rescued a popular barbershop owner and and his family, who were missing for more than two days, said it felt great to hoist up the dad, his kids and a chihuahua to safety late Thursday night in rugged terrain.

Jodi Hernandez reports. (Published Friday, May 8, 2015). The co-owner of a popular barbershop and his two kids, who went missing after a camping trip to Sierra County has been found safe, family members said late Thursday. That brought great relief to the family and friends of Nick Vlahos, the co-owner Temescal Alley Barbershop in Oakland, who had last been heard from Tuesday morning on a camping trip with his 5-year-old son and 3-year-old daughter.

The barbershop was was featured in a 2014 New York Times article," Oakland: Brooklyn by the Bay" to show how hip Oakland has become. Supervisor Joins Fight to Save Palo Alto Mobile Home Park. People describe the old-fashioned "ultra-masculine" shop, which only takes walk-ins, as the "Cheers" of barbershops. "The kids are safe," said business partner Rob Wharton. "It's kind of funny, they thought it was one big adventure. ".

"It Was a Very Happy Cockpit:" National Guard Pilot on Rescue of Barber, Kids on Camping Trip. The pilot who rescued a popular barbershop owner and and his family, who were missing for more than two days, said it felt great to hoist up the dad, his kids and a chihuahua to safety late Thursday night in rugged terrain. Jodi Hernandez reports. (Published Friday, May 8, 2015).

The Sierra County sheriff's department said an Air National Guard helicopter spotted the family's truck in rough terrain at about 8 p. Thursday. The family was found near the small town of Downieville in Sierra County -- about 100 miles northeast of Sacramento. Vlahos' Toyota Tacoma had gotten stuck on the backroads, Wharton said, who added that Vlahos didn't panic - he kept strobe lights on to help crews find him. Video Elderly Couple, Women Shot With Paintballs. Leah Bershad, who is the wife of Vlahos' other business partner, Bradley Roberts, said that Vlahos was an experienced camper, and had just returned from a trip with her husband to the Mojave desert.

She and others had their fingers crossed that he was OK despite two days of worry. Before Vlahos was found, Roberts said he assumed that he his friend had lost cell phone coverage and was just "waiting it out. " He said that Vlahos always took his kids camping in the truck.